They are the colourful carpets used to coat the streets of Guatemala's cities during their iconic Easter Holy Week processions.
And this year the strongly Catholic country has a new reason to celebrate - it has been recognised by Guinness World Records for producing the longest sawdust carpet in the world.
Using
 5,000 volunteers to create it, as well as 54 tonnes of sawdust, the 
record-breaking carpet measure a whopping 6,600ft - more than 2,000ft 
longer than the previous record holder.
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 Riot of colour: Locals walk alongside the world's longest sawdust carpet created in Guatemala City
Riot of colour: Locals walk alongside the world's longest sawdust carpet created in Guatemala City Dedicated: Up to 5,000 volunteers helped to design the spectacular carpet of sawdust which ran the entire length of a street
Dedicated: Up to 5,000 volunteers helped to design the spectacular carpet of sawdust which ran the entire length of a street
The spectacular work of art takes 
painstaking design a d planning, before devoted artists spend hours 
creating beautiful scenes out of sawdust dyed different colours.
And
 heartbreakingly, once the work is done and admired, it is completely 
destroyed by processions of penitents who walk straight down the carpet 
carrying effigies of Christ and the Virgin Mary as part of their Holy 
Week celebrations. 
The 
carpets of flowers and sawdust designs are an iconic part of Guatemala's
 Easter festival, when penitents dressed in hoods take to the streets to
 walk for miles carrying heavy statues representing different stages of 
the Passion.
The
 longest Easter carpet  in the world may have been designed in the 
capital Guatemala City, but it is the nearby colonial town of Antigua 
that is the most famous destination in Latin America to experience Holy 
Week.


World Record: The beautiful carpet was measured at 6,600ft long and 54 tonnes of dyed sawdust were used to create it
 Streets ahead: The previous World Record for an 
Easter sawdust carpet was just 4,593ft, more than 2,000ft shorter than 
the new record holder
Streets ahead: The previous World Record for an 
Easter sawdust carpet was just 4,593ft, more than 2,000ft shorter than 
the new record holder Work of art: Volunteers spend hours each year 
designing spectacular religious scenes using just coloured sawdust, the 
designs last only fleetingly until a religious procession passes through
 and walks through the sawdust
Work of art: Volunteers spend hours each year 
designing spectacular religious scenes using just coloured sawdust, the 
designs last only fleetingly until a religious procession passes through
 and walks through the sawdust Lost in a moment: After the carpets are created 
and photographed, religious processions are allowed to pass through the 
streets and the designs are destroyed
Lost in a moment: After the carpets are created 
and photographed, religious processions are allowed to pass through the 
streets and the designs are destroyed
With
 colourful buildings and cobbled streets, the pretty town is overlooked 
by volcanoes and was the former capital of Guatemala.
Now
 it is the country's most famous tourist site, with hundreds of 
thousands of visitors flocking to the town from all over the world each 
year - experiencing the drama of the Holy Week processions is considered
 the ultimate highlight.
Tourists
 stand and watch as volunteers lay planks of wood over the street to 
they don't disturb the sawdust design they are creating, then stay to 
watch the processions pass through the freshly decorated street - 
destroying the painstaking artwork.
 Winner: Guinness World Record's official Evelyn 
Arreaga measures a the carpet of flowers and colored sawdust to declare 
it a new record
Winner: Guinness World Record's official Evelyn 
Arreaga measures a the carpet of flowers and colored sawdust to declare 
it a new record Long-standing traditions: Penitents struggles 
under the heavy weight of life-size statues of Christ adorned with gold 
as they make their way through the streets in the Guatemalan town of 
Antigua
Long-standing traditions: Penitents struggles 
under the heavy weight of life-size statues of Christ adorned with gold 
as they make their way through the streets in the Guatemalan town of 
Antigua
The
 traditional Easter processions are common throughout the Catholic 
world, with Spain also staging its own spectacular celebrations.
While
 Antigua is known as the place to witness the most spectacular 
processions in Latin America, Seville, in Andalucia, is the most famous 
Spanish city for Easter parades.
Penitents
 wear gowns and conical hoods - a tradition that was meant to maintain 
their anonymity – for the haunting processions as they carry life-size 
effigies of Jesus Christ and the Virgin Mary through city streets 
accompanied by dramatic drum beats and mournful music.
 Age is no barrier: Young penitents carry a 
wooden cross during a procession by Saint Francis church as part of Holy
 Week celebrations in Antigua
Age is no barrier: Young penitents carry a 
wooden cross during a procession by Saint Francis church as part of Holy
 Week celebrations in Antigua Eerie sight: The burning of incense is another 
important part of the processions, sometimes used so liberally it can be
 difficult to see
Eerie sight: The burning of incense is another 
important part of the processions, sometimes used so liberally it can be
 difficult to see
Tourists
 line the streets as scheduled processions weave their way through the 
towns and cities from early morning until late at night.
Each
 cofradia (brotherhood) is represented with different coloured robes and
 the masks were historically to provide anonymity for those looking to 
pay penance.
Despite
 soaring temperatures, the faithful struggle under their heavy costumes,
 swaying as they carry huge floats between them and sometimes even 
walking barefoot.
 
 
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